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Nucleic Acids Research, 1978, Vol. 5, No. 7 2587-2605
© 1978


Articles

Histone H1—DNA interaction. On the mechanism of DNA strands crosslinking by histone H1

B.O. Glotov, L.G. Nikolaev and E.S. Severin

Institute of Molecular Biology, Academy of Sciences of the USSR Moscow, 117312, USSR

Received April 3, 1978. Crosslinking of DNA fibers by histone H1 or phosphorylated on Ser-37 histone H1, and by the individual fragments of the H1 polypeptide chain was studied by the method of turbidimetry. The dependence of the turbidity of DNA-protein complexes on the ionic strength in solution suggests that the condensation of H1.DNA complexes in vitro is apparently due to both specific histone-DNA interactions with the contribution of hydrogen and/or hydrophobic bonds and the formation of polycationic "bridges" fastening the DNA fibers. The effectiveness of the condensation is postulated to be a function of a proportion between the two mechanisms which in turn can be controlled by slight changes in ionic surroundings. The sharp dependence of shrinkage of H1.DNA complexes on ionic strength at "physiological" salt concentrations could provide a mechanism to regulate density and consequently the total activity of chromatin in the cell nuclei. The phosphorylation of histone H1 on Ser-37 by a specific histone kinase does not noticeably affect the pattern of DNA croselinking by the H1.


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